No, but it depends on what kind of bubbles you are trying to make. Soap bubbles aren't made out of water and baking soda. You can add baking soda to vinegar and create bubbles, as you've seen in fake volcanoes.
You need to add carbonated water .
Vinegar, when added to bicarbonate of soda (or baking soda), will produce the described effect.
No. Baking powder is used to make floury things rise. Baking soda is used to add soda bubbles. But Baking Soda and Bicarbonate of Soda are the same thing.
Without detergent it does not. If you add something like washing up liquid to heated water you can get good bubbles (too watery and they won't have the strength to grow well)
When you add bicarbonate of soda in vinegar, it froths up with bubbles.
Of a chemical reaction, the acidic vinegar reacts with the baking soda and one of the by products is a gas, carbon dioxide, that gas is the bubbles.
You can add a bit of baking soda. The high temperatures cause the baking soda to release carbon dioxide bubbles and create a lighter brittle that snaps easily
When you add salt to soap it will make more bubbles. not bigger bubbles but more bubbles.
club soda
Diet Coke erupts when you add sugar to it because the sugar lowers the surface tension in the soda. The bubbles will then be able to break the surface and cause the eruption.
Add vinegar